Michael Rossi
There is No Hope - This Country is DONE!
11 June 2010 | 114 replies
Rich23s, your lack of reading-comprehension is making you the one who looks like an idiot.
Dwayne Buckner
Carbon Monoxide
7 June 2010 | 20 replies
A lawyer can give you a better assessment of the strength of your case.
Bev Willerby
Property Tax Confusion....
17 June 2010 | 3 replies
If it is similar to what we have here in Phoenix, then you have an assessed value for a property, which should be around the same number for similar properties in the same neighborhood.The tax is a percent of that assessed value.
Tess Vismale
Can a 2nd mortgage foreclose if the 1st is current?
22 June 2010 | 5 replies
The house is tax assessed @ $68k was once $215k.
Mike McKinzie
Mishandling my money
7 August 2010 | 28 replies
Mike - If you no longer want to participate in the thread, that's fine, but I believe this is an important thread to keep open.I'm curious if Jon's assessment is correct.
Luiz Souza
More bad news about SSs :(
8 July 2010 | 37 replies
I think the part that people falsely believe is that real estate MUST be sold for what it is "worth" but the real issues comes down to liquidity for the bank, and assessing the risk/reward for whatever exit strategy they take to recover the money they have in the deal.
Kim Hawkinson
Assessed Values
6 July 2010 | 4 replies
I was just wondering what the difference was between appraised values and assessed values on a property.
Bryan Hancock
Is There Value In Having So Many Intermediaries Between Borrowers and The Secondary Market For Mortgages?
11 July 2010 | 8 replies
Fannie and Freddie are obviously doing a terrible job of assessing risk for borrowers with their mounds of prescribed paperwork.
Bryan Graf
Rate this deal
17 July 2010 | 6 replies
2) Also, I have had this problem with couple of the properties I had accepted offer on that the property was listed as 2-unit; however, the county or the city assessed it as a SFH.
Nathan Whitney
How Do You Buy Outside of Local Market?
27 July 2010 | 19 replies
We take a distressed property, pay the mortgages, back taxes, assessments, negotiate with the lender, etc. and turn it into a retail sale (at a great price for the end buyer) that can close without all of the hassles of buying a short sale property!